May 3, 2016 7:54pm EDTJanuary 30, 2015 3:12pm ESTOregon has become the landing spot for offense and plenty of talented players have come through Eugene. Bobby Moore did it all, and there's Joey Harrington, LaMichael James and current QB Marcus Mariota. Here's SN's 10 best Ducks.Top 10 Oregon Ducks of all time

Ken Bradley

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Top 10 Oregon Ducks of all time

Oregon has become the landing spot for offense and plenty of talented players have come through Eugene. Bobby Moore did it all, and there's Joey Harrington, LaMichael James and current QB Marcus Mariota. Here's SN's 10 best Ducks.

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Marcus Mariota, QB

Mariota took his legacy to the next level by becoming the school's first Heisman Trophy winner in 2014. He led Oregon to the first College Football championship, and he was arguably the most-efficient dual-threat quarterback in the history of college football. Mariota finished with 10,796 passing yards, 2,237 rushing yards and 134 total touchdowns. The Titans took Mariota with the No. 2 pick in the 2015 NFL Draft. (Steve Dykes/Getty Images)

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Bobby Moore, WR

Before he became Ahmad Rashad, Moore was the most dynamic player to come through Oregon. When he left school, he held Ducks records in rushing yards in a game (249), season (1,211), career (2,306) as well as more receptions in a season (54) and career (131). He led the conference in scoring twice from two different positions. (AP Photo)

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Joey Harrington, QB

The quarterback was a big part — literally — in Oregon football becoming what it is today. The Ducks spent a ton of money to place a large billboard of Harrington on a New York City skyscraper as part of its Heisman campaign. Harrington finished fourth, but his mark was made. He threw for 6,911 career yards with 59 TD passes. Nicknamed “Captain Comeback,” Harrington was 25-3 as a starter and was 11-2 in games Oregon trailed or was tied in the fourth quarter. (Otto Greule Jr./Getty Images)

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Bill Musgrave, QB

Musgrave took over as starting quarterback in 1987 and the Ducks hadn’t reached a bowl game since 1963. In four seasons, Oregon went 28-19 and reached two bowl games. He’s No. 1 in career passing yards at OU with 8,343 yards with 60 TDs. His final two seasons were huge. In 1989, he set then-school records for yards (3,081) and TDs (22) and a year later was named Academic All-American of the Year when he had another 2,611 passing yards. (GoDucks.com)

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Gary Zimmerman, OL

All-American guard in 1983, all-conference 1983; the best offensive lineman to roll through Eugene, he was named the Pac-10’s top lineman as a senior. Just how good was he? He earned the league’s players of the week honor — as an offensive lineman — after the Ducks beat Cal. (GoDucks.com)

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Haloti Ngata, DT

In his three seasons at Oregon, Ngata was as dominating as any Duck lineman to ever play. He was an All-American in 2005, the conference’s co-Defensive Player of the Year as well as the league’s lineman of the year. He piled up 151 career tackles and blocked a school-record seven kicks. (Robert Laberge/Getty Images)

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Norm Van Brocklin/Dan Fouts, QB

Two pioneers in Oregon quarterbacking history. Van Brocklin — The Dutchman — was one of the program’s first superstars. He took the Ducks to their first bowl game in 29 seasons in ’48 when they finished 9-2. Fouts became the first Oregon passer to top 2,000 yards in a season. From 1970-72, he set at least 19 school records. He finished with 5,995 passing yards and 37 TD tosses — exceptional numbers during that era. (Courtesy of Oregon Athletics)

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Mel Renfro, RB/DB

A phenomenal athlete and football player, Renfro was All-American in 1962 and ’63 and All-Coast team from 61-63. He led Oregon in rushing three consecutive seasons and finished with 1,540 yards. One of the program’s top return men as well, Renfro finished second in the 1962 NCAA 120-yard high hurdles. (GoDucks.com)

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LaMichael James, RB

An yard-producing machine, James is Oregon’s all-time rushing leader with 5,082 yards. He totaled 5,869 all-purpose yards in his career. He was the conference’s Offensive Freshman of the Year in 2009, an All-American in 2010 and 2011 and won the Doak Walker in ’10 and finished third in Heisman voting. His best game — 288 rushing yards vs. Arizona in 2011. He had seasons with 1,731 and 1,805 rushing yards. (Otto Greule Jr/Getty Images)

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Dennis Dixon, QB

He was the 2007 conference Player of the Year, but a knee injury damaged his chance at winning the Heisman — he also was a finalist for the Maxwell, Davey O’Brien and Walter Camp awards. He finished with 2,719 total yards in 10 games. He ran for a then-record 1,208 career yards for a quarterback, threw for 5,129 yards and 38 TDs. (Otto Greule Jr/Getty Images)